XIV. LIMITS OF THE NORTH-EASTERN PART OF THE SITE.
A grant of part of the site of Greyfriars to Sir John
Williams and Sir Edward North in February, 1543, is defined
in the extract given below. It is not altogether easy to
follow; since the boundary of the grant starts from the northeast corner of the Church and runs through the length of the
Choir, "orientaliter" must be used in the sense of easterly,
from the east. The first door of the Cloister is at the entry
from the Walking-place. The next door is in the south-west
corner of the Cloister, which is described as "angulum concavum in convexione maioris et minoris Dormitorii," for this
the St. Bartholomew's plan seems to supply an explanation;
in the plan the vaulting at this point is indicated in a somewhat
different manner to that adopted for the other corners; here
was the principal entry into the Cloister, by a way that led
from the Friars' cemetery; we may conjecture that the meetingplace of this way with the South and West Walks was provided
for by a more spacious vaulting than was required elsewhere.
The next stage in the description would seem to fix the
Chapter house at the south end of the West Walk, and
shows that the Great Dortor ran the whole length of the
Cloister; but as regards the position of the Chapter-house
this is probably incorrect (see p. 43 above). The boundary on
the north is clear till it reaches "the little garden that belonged
to the City"; the St. Bartholomew's plan shows a garden against
the City Wall as marked on the plan in this volume, and this is
probably the one intended. But the whole description is vague
and difficult to interpret; possibly the boundary ran round this
garden, finally going northwards, we can thus give "australiter"
a signification analogous to that which is clearly applied before
to "orientaliter"; in that case the Friars must have had a
garden east of the City Garden and the words "per murum ut
ibidem stat" may then apply to the irregular outline of Northumberland House garden on the east side of Stinking-Lane.
The plan shows "a court" on the west of the Lane, immediately north of the Vestry; this Court clearly communicated
with the Lane, but apparently not with the Greyfriars; I conjecture that it represents the tenements which had belonged
to the Charterhouse. We then reach "the pale of the Friars
garden"; the description seems to be imperfect and is difficult
to follow, but the boundary ran at one point "occidentaliter"
(from the west) and finally came out on the east front [of the
Church] and so to the north-east corner of the Choir whence it
started; it does not seem to be possible to get any meaning
out of this except on the theory that it relates to a garden
on the east side of the Lane; there was a garden in this
position, with a door nearly opposite to the Friars Vestry, and
with its south-west corner over against the centre of the east
front of the Church. See further on p. 31 above, and the
plan p. 52. The Grant is calendered in Letters and Papers,
Henry VIII., xviii., p. 132.
Videlicet ab angulo orientali chori Ecclesie dicte dudum
fratrum Minorum, qui est versus partem borealem, decurrendo
orientaliter contigue per longitudinem eiusdem chori versus
primum ostium ad porticum magni claustri ibidem et abinde
usque ad proximum ostium claustri iuxta capitalem domum
orientaliter usque ad angulum concavum in convexione
maioris et minoris Dormitorii, et ab eo angulo per directam
lineam decurrendo ab eadem ecclesia a parte australi per
longitudinem dicti magni Dormitorii et Domus Capitularis
ibidem et per residuum dicti magni Dormitorii contigue
septentrionem versus usque ad murum dicte ciuitatis London.,
et abinde eundo in longitudine eiusdem muri ad orientem
usque ad angulum cuiusdam orti pertinentis dicte ciuitati et ab
eo angulo orti a septentrione et ad austrum per longitudinem
muri adiacentis mansionem vocatam Northumberland place
et deinde continuando australiter versus contigue per murum
ut ibidem stat usque quedam tenementa dudum pertinencia
nuper prioratui siue domui Carthusie prope civitatem
nostram London. predictam modo dissoluto usque le Garden
pale orti dudum pertinentis dictis nuper fratribus modo vel
nuper in tenura cuiusdam Johannis Clynton, ciuis et Grocer
London., directe usque ad orientem partem dicti chori versus
austrum et inde occidentaliter per longitudinem pale dicti
orti usque ad orientalem frontem et sic ad angulum primum
dicti chori; ac omnia et omnimoda domos, aedificia, cameras,
curtilagia et gardina infra bundas, metas, et limites predictas
situata, jacentia, sive existentia, unacum omnibus et omnimodis
aquis et aqueductibus, viis, ingressibus et egressibus ad et in
premissa dicto nuper domui dudum fratrum Minorum spectantia et pertinentia, ac ad et in quamlibet inde parcellam ab
antiquo habita, consueta sive usitata, necnon libertatem, facultatem et auctoritatem de tempore ad tempus haurendi, accipiendi et habendi apud aqueductum sive canalem vulgariter
nuncupatum le Conduyte situatum et existentem infra claustra
sive claustrum dicti nuper domus dudum fratrum Minorum.
Ac omnia et singula alia libertates privilegia, commoditates,
easiamenta et proficua quecunque eedem (sic) domui concessa,
spectantia aut quoquo modo pertinentia.